Wordspector

You love detective games where you really have to use your head? Then you have come to the exactly right place in Wordspector. The title of the game is made up of the words Words and Inspector, so you can already conclude that here you will need all your logical skills. You should also be proficient in the English language, because the manual and the game itself are in English. Here you can really prove what you have got in you. You probably know the old game of Hangman, in which you have to guess a whole world with different letters. The game Wordspector has the same structure. You have to, with the help of various letters that light up in different colors, try to find the solution. You get a number of letters that you can then form new words with. If you have formed the right word, you get new characters, and you have to find a new word. There are so many different ways to combine the letters and to make a move that you really have to make quite the effort, so you end up with the word that the game is really in search of. You have to rely on your skills like Sherlock Holmes, and sometimes even just thinking gets you further. But you better not to think for too long, because you can see your time run out slowly but surely at the top left. For each new word, which you are able to form, you get points. Wordspector will certainly not be easy on you, but you will see how you will be able to do this more quickly with time, and how you can come up with more and more words. Eventually, you will surely come up with the right word.

The cross grid as well as the number puzzle are based on an entirely different principle than that of the crossword puzzle. In the cross grid, the solution words have already been given. Using some predefined letters in the puzzle, the position of the words now has to be found. In number puzzles, there is a number between 1 and 26 in each box. The only help to solve this here is a word that has already been entered. Through a clever combining, one now needs to figure out which number stands in for which letter in the alphabet. A good starting point here is the idea that E in German is the most frequent letter, others such as X and Y occur only rarely and Q is almost always in connection with a U. In the end, all registered letters should yield both vertically and horizontally meaningful words.